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Dive into the research topics where Artur Fernandes is active.

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Featured researches published by Artur Fernandes.


Brain Research | 2011

Comparative neuroanatomical and temporal characterization of FluoroJade-positive neurodegeneration after status epilepticus induced by systemic and intrahippocampal pilocarpine in Wistar rats.

Olagide W. Castro; M.A. Furtado; Cristiane Queixa Tilelli; Artur Fernandes; Gisela P. Pajolla; Norberto Garcia-Cairasco

The aims of this study were to characterize the spatial distribution of neurodegeneration after status epilepticus (SE) induced by either systemic (S) or intrahippocampal (H) injection of pilocarpine (PILO), two models of temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), using FluoroJade (FJ) histochemistry, and to evaluate the kinetics of FJ staining in the H-PILO model. Therefore, we measured the severity of behavioral seizures during both types of SE and also evaluated the FJ staining pattern at 12, 24, and 168 h (7days) after the H-PILO insult. We found that the amount of FJ-positive (FJ+) area was greater in SE induced by S-PILO as compared to SE induced by H-PILO. After SE induced by H-PILO, we found more FJ+ cells in the hilus of the dentate gyrus (DG) at 12 h, in CA3 at 24 h, and in CA1 at 168 h. We found also no correlation between seizure severity and the number of FJ+ cells in the hippocampus. Co-localization studies of FJ+ cells with either neuronal-specific nuclear protein (NeuN) or glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) labeling 24 h after H-PILO demonstrated spatially selective neurodegeneration. Double labeling with FJ and parvalbumin (PV) showed both FJ+/PV+ and FJ+/PV- cells in hippocampus and entorhinal cortex, among other areas. The current data indicate that FJ+ areas are differentially distributed in the two TLE models and that these areas are greater in the S-PILO than in the H-PILO model. There is also a selective kinetics of FJ+ cells in the hippocampus after SE induced by H-PILO, with no association with the severity of seizures, probably as a consequence of the extra-hippocampal damage. These data point to SE induced by H-PILO as a low-mortality model of TLE, with regional spatial and temporal patterns of FJ staining.


Epilepsy Research | 2008

Chelatable zinc modulates excitability and seizure duration in the amygdala rapid kindling model

Maira Licia Foresti; Gabriel Maisonnave Arisi; Artur Fernandes; Cristiane Queixa Tilelli; Norberto Garcia-Cairasco

Zinc is present in high concentration in many structures of the limbic circuitry, however the role of zinc as a neuromodulator in such synapses is still uncertain. In this work, we verified the effects of zinc chelation in an animal model of epileptogenesis induced by amygdala rapid kindling. The basolateral amygdala was electrically stimulated ten times per day for 2 days. A single stimulus was applied on the third day. Stimulated animals received injections of PBS or the zinc chelator diethildythiocarbamate acid (DEDTC) before each stimulus series. Animals were monitored with video-EEG and were perfused 3h after the last stimulus for subsequent neo-Timm and Fluoro-Jade B analysis. Zinc chelation decreased the duration of both behavioral seizures and electrical after-discharges, and also decreased the EEG spikes frequency, without changing the progression of behavioral seizure severity. These results indicate that the zinc ion may have a facilitatory role during kindling progression.


Epilepsy & Behavior | 2005

Correlation between shaking behaviors and seizure severity in five animal models of convulsive seizures

Marcelo Rodrigues; Franco Rossetti; Maira Licia Foresti; Gabriel Maisonnave Arisi; Márcio Araújo Furtado; Maria Luiza Cleto Dal-Cól; Poliana Bertti; Artur Fernandes; Francisco L. dos Santos; Flavio Del Vecchio; Norberto Garcia-Cairasco

Wet dog shakes (WDS) and head shakes (HS) are associated with experimentally induced convulsive seizures. We sought to determine whether these behaviors are correlated or not with major (status epilepticus (SE) or fully kindled animals) or minor (non-SE or partially kindled animals) seizure severity. WDS are directly correlated with SE induced by intracerebral star fruit extract (Averrhoa carambola) injection and with kindled animals in the amygdala fast kindling model. On the other hand, WDS are inversely correlated with SE induced by intracerebral bicuculline and pilocarpine injections. Systemic pilocarpine in animals pretreated with methyl-scopolamine barely induced WDS or HS. The role of shaking behaviors may vary from ictal to anticonvulsant depending on the experimental seizure model, circuitries involved, and stimulus intensity. The physical presence of acrylic helmets may per se inhibit the HS response. Also, methyl-scopolamine, a drug incapable of crossing the blood-brain barrier, can induce HS in animals without acrylic helmets.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2011

Bithalamic compromise in acute disseminated encephalomyelitis following H1N1 influenza vaccine

Artur Fernandes; Paulo Eurípedes Marchiori

Received 4 July 2010. Received in final form 18 January 2011. Accepted 25 January 2011. A 5-year-old boy was admitted with history of fever, nausea, vomiting and somnolence which had started two days after H1N1 influenza vaccination. Neurological examination showed mild gait ataxia, vertical ophthalmoparesis and brisk deep tendon reflexes. Brain MRI revealed right frontal and bilateral thalamic lesions with increased signal in T2-weighted and flair images (Figs A, B, C, D). Cerebrospinal fluid analysis showed mild lymphocytic pleocytosis. The patient had a marked clinical improvement after oral corticosteroids was commenced. Bilateral thalamic lesions have been reported in 12% of pediatric patients with ADEM. This is the first case of ADEM following H1N1 vaccine reported in Brazil.


Epilepsy & Behavior | 2005

Different types of status epilepticus lead to different levels of brain damage in rats

Cristiane Queixa Tilelli; Flavio Del Vecchio; Artur Fernandes; Norberto Garcia-Cairasco

We investigated a possible correlation between behavior during status epilepticus (SE) and underlying brain damage. Adult rats were electrically stimulated in the left amygdala to induce SE, which was stopped 2 hours later. We observed two different types of SE: (1) typical SE (TSE), with facial automatisms, neck and forelimb myoclonus, rearing and falling, and tonic-clonic seizures; (2) ambulatory SE (ASE), with facial automatisms, neck myoclonus, and concomitant ambulatory behavior. TSE was behaviorally more severe than ASE (P<0.05). Histology revealed neuronal loss in several brain areas. There was a positive correlation between SE type and amount of injured areas 24 hours and 14 days after SE (P<0.01). The areas more affected were piriform cortex and hippocampal formation. We suggest quality of seizures during SE may be considered in further SE studies, as our results indicate its influence on the severity of brain damage following this paradigm.


Epilepsy & Behavior | 2012

Behavioral and EEG effects of GABAergic manipulation of the nigro-tectal pathway in the Wistar audiogenic rat (WAR) strain II: an EEG wavelet analysis and retrograde neuronal tracer approach.

Franco Rossetti; Marcelo Rodrigues; Simone Saldanha Marroni; Artur Fernandes; Maira Licia Foresti; Rodrigo N. Romcy-Pereira; Draulio B. de Araujo; Norberto Garcia-Cairasco

The role of the substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNPr) and superior colliculus (SC) network in rat strains susceptible to audiogenic seizures still remain underexplored in epileptology. In a previous study from our laboratory, the GABAergic drugs bicuculline (BIC) and muscimol (MUS) were microinjected into the deep layers of either the anterior SC (aSC) or the posterior SC (pSC) in animals of the Wistar audiogenic rat (WAR) strain submitted to acoustic stimulation, in which simultaneous electroencephalographic (EEG) recording of the aSC, pSC, SNPr and striatum was performed. Only MUS microinjected into the pSC blocked audiogenic seizures. In the present study, we expanded upon these previous results using the retrograde tracer Fluorogold (FG) microinjected into the aSC and pSC in conjunction with quantitative EEG analysis (wavelet transform), in the search for mechanisms associated with the susceptibility of this inbred strain to acoustic stimulation. Our hypothesis was that the WAR strain would have different connectivity between specific subareas of the superior colliculus and the SNPr when compared with resistant Wistar animals and that these connections would lead to altered behavior of this network during audiogenic seizures. Wavelet analysis showed that the only treatment with an anticonvulsant effect was MUS microinjected into the pSC region, and this treatment induced a sustained oscillation in the theta band only in the SNPr and in the pSC. These data suggest that in WAR animals, there are at least two subcortical loops and that the one involved in audiogenic seizure susceptibility appears to be the pSC-SNPr circuit. We also found that WARs presented an increase in the number of FG+ projections from the posterior SNPr to both the aSC and pSC (primarily to the pSC), with both acting as proconvulsant nuclei when compared with Wistar rats. We concluded that these two different subcortical loops within the basal ganglia are probably a consequence of the WAR genetic background.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2018

Divergent brain changes in two audiogenic rat strains: A voxel-based morphometry and diffusion tensor imaging comparison of the genetically epilepsy prone rat (GEPR-3) and the Wistar Audiogenic Rat (WAR)

Yi-Chien Lee; Olga Rodriguez; Chris Albanese; Victor R. Santos; J.A.C. Oliveira; Ana Luiza Ferreira Donatti; Artur Fernandes; Norberto Garcia-Cairasco; Prosper N'Gouemo; Patrick A. Forcelli

Acoustically evoked seizures (e.g., audiogenic seizures or AGS) are common in models of inherited epilepsy and occur in a variety of species including rat, mouse, and hamster. Two models that have been particularly well studied are the genetically epilepsy prone rat (GEPR-3) and the Wistar Audiogenic Rat (WAR) strains. Acute and repeated AGS, as well as comorbid conditions, displays a close phenotypic overlap in these models. Whether these similarities arise from convergent or divergent structural changes in the brain remains unknown. Here, we examined the brain structure of Sprague Dawley (SD) and Wistar (WIS) rats, and quantified changes in the GEPR-3 and WAR, respectively. Brains from adult, male rats of each strain (n=8-10 per group) were collected, fixed, and embedded in agar and imaged using a 7 tesla Bruker MRI. Post-acquisition analysis included voxel-based morphometry (VBM), diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), and manual volumetric tracing. In the VBM analysis, GEPR-3 displayed volumetric changes in brainstem structures known to be engaged by AGS (e.g., superior and inferior colliculus, periaqueductal grey) and in forebrain structures (e.g., striatum, septum, nucleus accumbens). WAR displayed volumetric changes in superior colliculus, and a broader set of limbic regions (e.g., hippocampus, amygdala/piriform cortex). The only area of significant overlap in the two strains was the midline cerebellum: both GEPR-3 and WAR showed decreased volume compared to their control strains. In the DTI analysis, GEPR-3 displayed decreased fractional anisotropy (FA) in the corpus callosum, posterior commissure and commissure of the inferior colliculus (IC). WAR displayed increased FA only in the commissure of IC. These data provide a biological basis for further comparative and mechanistic studies in the GEPR-3 and WAR models, as well as provide additional insight into commonalities in the pathways underlying AGS susceptibility and behavioral comorbidity.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2018

Free-floating adult human brain-derived slice cultures as a model to study the neuronal impact of Alzheimer's disease-associated Aβ oligomers

Niele Dias Mendes; Artur Fernandes; Glaucia M. Almeida; Luis E. Santos; Maria Clara Selles; N.M. Lyra e Silva; Carla M. Machado; José de Anchieta de Castro e Horta-Júnior; Paulo Roberto Louzada; Fernanda G. De Felice; Soniza Vieira Alves-Leon; Jorge Marcondes; João Alberto Assirati; Caio M. Matias; William L. Klein; Norberto Garcia-Cairasco; Sergio T. Ferreira; Luciano Neder; Adriano Sebollela

BACKGROUND Slice cultures have been prepared from several organs. With respect to the brain, advantages of slice cultures over dissociated cell cultures include maintenance of the cytoarchitecture and neuronal connectivity. Slice cultures from adult human brain have been reported and constitute a promising method to study neurological diseases. Despite this potential, few studies have characterized in detail cell survival and function along time in short-term, free-floating cultures. NEW METHOD We used tissue from adult human brain cortex from patients undergoing temporal lobectomy to prepare 200 μm-thick slices. Along the period in culture, we evaluated neuronal survival, histological modifications, and neurotransmitter release. The toxicity of Alzheimers-associated Aβ oligomers (AβOs) to cultured slices was also analyzed. RESULTS Neurons in human brain slices remain viable and neurochemically active for at least four days in vitro, which allowed detection of binding of AβOs. We further found that slices exposed to AβOs presented elevated levels of hyperphosphorylated Tau, a hallmark of Alzheimers disease. COMPARISON WITH EXISTING METHOD(S) Although slice cultures from adult human brain have been previously prepared, this is the first report to analyze cell viability and neuronal activity in short-term free-floating cultures as a function of days in vitro. CONCLUSIONS Once surgical tissue is available, the current protocol is easy to perform and produces functional slices from adult human brain. These slice cultures may represent a preferred model for translational studies of neurodegenerative disorders when long term culturing in not required, as in investigations on AβO neurotoxicity.


Epilepsy & Behavior | 2018

Intense olfactory stimulation blocks seizures in an experimental model of epilepsy

Polianna Delfino-Pereira; Poliana Bertti-Dutra; Eduardo H.L. Umeoka; J.A.C. Oliveira; Victor Rodrigues Santos; Artur Fernandes; Simone Saldanha Marroni; Flavio Del Vecchio; Norberto Garcia-Cairasco

There are reports of patients whose epileptic seizures are prevented by means of olfactory stimulation. Similar findings were described in animal models of epilepsy, such as the electrical kindling of amygdala, where olfactory stimulation with toluene (TOL) suppressed seizures in most rats, even when the stimuli were 20% above the threshold to evoke seizures in already kindled animals. The Wistar Audiogenic Rat (WAR) strain is a model of tonic-clonic seizures induced by acute acoustic stimulation, although it also expresses limbic seizures when repeated acoustic stimulation occurs - a process known as audiogenic kindling (AK). The aim of this study was to evaluate whether or not the olfactory stimulation with TOL would interfere on the behavioral expression of brainstem (acute) and limbic (chronic) seizures in the WAR strain. For this, animals were exposed to TOL or saline (SAL) and subsequently exposed to acoustic stimulation in two conditions that generated: I) acute audiogenic seizures (only one acoustic stimulus, without previous seizure experience before of the odor test) and II) after AK (20 acoustic stimuli [2 daily] before of the protocol test). We observed a decrease in the seizure severity index of animals exposed only to TOL in both conditions, with TOL presented 20s before the acoustic stimulation in both protocols. These findings were confirmed by behavioral sequential analysis (neuroethology), which clearly indicated an exacerbation of clusters of specific behaviors such as exploration and grooming (self-cleaning), as well as significant decrease in the expression of brainstem and limbic seizures in response to TOL. Thus, these data demonstrate that TOL, a strong olfactory stimulus, has anticonvulsant properties, detected by the decrease of acute and AK seizures in WARs.


Neurociências & Psicologia | 2016

II Semana Nacional do Cérebro (SNC/2013): popularizando as neurociências

Carlos Henrique Buck; Rafael N. Ruggiero; Daniela Martí-Barros; Jorge Alberto Quillfeldt; Márcia Renata Mortari; Cecilia Hedin-Pereira; Artur Fernandes; Lezio Soares Bueno-Junior; Maria Elena Crespo-López; Amauri Gouveia; Antonio Pereira Junior; Norberto Garcia-Cairasco; Maira M. Fróes

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Amauri Gouveia

Federal University of Pará

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Antonio Pereira Junior

Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte

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Carlos Henrique Buck

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Cecilia Hedin-Pereira

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Daniela Martí-Barros

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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